USB4 and Thunderbolt¶
USB4 is the public specification based on Thunderbolt 3 protocol with some differences at the register level among other things. Connection manager is an entity running on the host router (host controller) responsible for enumerating routers and establishing tunnels. A connection manager can be implemented either in firmware or software. Typically PCs come with a firmware connection manager for Thunderbolt 3 and early USB4 capable systems. Apple systems on the other hand use software connection manager and the later USB4 compliant devices follow the suit.
The Linux Thunderbolt driver supports both and can detect at runtime which
connection manager implementation is to be used. To be on the safe side the
software connection manager in Linux also advertises security level
user
which means PCIe tunneling is disabled by default. The
documentation below applies to both implementations with the exception that
the software connection manager only supports user
security level and
is expected to be accompanied with an IOMMU based DMA protection.
Security levels and how to use them¶
The interface presented here is not meant for end users. Instead there should be a userspace tool that handles all the low-level details, keeps a database of the authorized devices and prompts users for new connections.
More details about the sysfs interface for Thunderbolt devices can be
found in Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-thunderbolt
.
Those users who just want to connect any device without any sort of
manual work can add following line to
/etc/udev/rules.d/99-local.rules
:
ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="thunderbolt", ATTR{authorized}=="0", ATTR{authorized}="1"
This will authorize all devices automatically when they appear. However, keep in mind that this bypasses the security levels and makes the system vulnerable to DMA attacks.
Starting with Intel Falcon Ridge Thunderbolt controller there are 4 security levels available. Intel Titan Ridge added one more security level (usbonly). The reason for these is the fact that the connected devices can be DMA masters and thus read contents of the host memory without CPU and OS knowing about it. There are ways to prevent this by setting up an IOMMU but it is not always available for various reasons.
The security levels are as follows:
- none
All devices are automatically connected by the firmware. No user approval is needed. In BIOS settings this is typically called Legacy mode.
- user
User is asked whether the device is allowed to be connected. Based on the device identification information available through
/sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices
, the user then can make the decision. In BIOS settings this is typically called Unique ID.- secure
User is asked whether the device is allowed to be connected. In addition to UUID the device (if it supports secure connect) is sent a challenge that should match the expected one based on a random key written to the
key
sysfs attribute. In BIOS settings this is typically called One time saved key.- dponly
The firmware automatically creates tunnels for Display Port and USB. No PCIe tunneling is done. In BIOS settings this is typically called Display Port Only.
- usbonly
The firmware automatically creates tunnels for the USB controller and Display Port in a dock. All PCIe links downstream of the dock are removed.
The current security level can be read from
/sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices/domainX/security
where domainX
is
the Thunderbolt domain the host controller manages. There is typically
one domain per Thunderbolt host controller.
If the security level reads as user
or secure
the connected
device must be authorized by the user before PCIe tunnels are created
(e.g the PCIe device appears).
Each Thunderbolt device plugged in will appear in sysfs under
/sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices
. The device directory carries
information that can be used to identify the particular device,
including its name and UUID.
DMA protection utilizing IOMMU¶
Recent systems from 2018 and forward with Thunderbolt ports may natively
support IOMMU. This means that Thunderbolt security is handled by an IOMMU
so connected devices cannot access memory regions outside of what is
allocated for them by drivers. When Linux is running on such system it
automatically enables IOMMU if not enabled by the user already. These
systems can be identified by reading 1
from
/sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices/domainX/iommu_dma_protection
attribute.
The driver does not do anything special in this case but because DMA
protection is handled by the IOMMU, security levels (if set) are
redundant. For this reason some systems ship with security level set to
none
. Other systems have security level set to user
in order to
support downgrade to older OS, so users who want to automatically
authorize devices when IOMMU DMA protection is enabled can use the
following udev
rule:
ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="thunderbolt", ATTRS{iommu_dma_protection}=="1", ATTR{authorized}=="0", ATTR{authorized}="1"
Upgrading NVM on Thunderbolt device or host¶
Since most of the functionality is handled in firmware running on a host controller or a device, it is important that the firmware can be upgraded to the latest where possible bugs in it have been fixed. Typically OEMs provide this firmware from their support site.
There is also a central site which has links where to download firmware for some machines:
Before you upgrade firmware on a device or host, please make sure it is a suitable upgrade. Failing to do that may render the device (or host) in a state where it cannot be used properly anymore without special tools!
Host NVM upgrade on Apple Macs is not supported.
Once the NVM image has been downloaded, you need to plug in a Thunderbolt device so that the host controller appears. It does not matter which device is connected (unless you are upgrading NVM on a device - then you need to connect that particular device).
Note an OEM-specific method to power the controller up (“force power”) may be available for your system in which case there is no need to plug in a Thunderbolt device.
After that we can write the firmware to the non-active parts of the NVM of the host or device. As an example here is how Intel NUC6i7KYK (Skull Canyon) Thunderbolt controller NVM is upgraded:
# dd if=KYK_TBT_FW_0018.bin of=/sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices/0-0/nvm_non_active0/nvmem
Once the operation completes we can trigger NVM authentication and upgrade process as follows:
# echo 1 > /sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices/0-0/nvm_authenticate
If no errors are returned, the host controller shortly disappears. Once it comes back the driver notices it and initiates a full power cycle. After a while the host controller appears again and this time it should be fully functional.
We can verify that the new NVM firmware is active by running the following commands:
# cat /sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices/0-0/nvm_authenticate
0x0
# cat /sys/bus/thunderbolt/devices/0-0/nvm_version
18.0
If nvm_authenticate
contains anything other than 0x0 it is the error
code from the last authentication cycle, which means the authentication
of the NVM image failed.
Note names of the NVMem devices nvm_activeN
and nvm_non_activeN
depend on the order they are registered in the NVMem subsystem. N in
the name is the identifier added by the NVMem subsystem.
Upgrading NVM when host controller is in safe mode¶
If the existing NVM is not properly authenticated (or is missing) the
host controller goes into safe mode which means that the only available
functionality is flashing a new NVM image. When in this mode, reading
nvm_version
fails with ENODATA
and the device identification
information is missing.
To recover from this mode, one needs to flash a valid NVM image to the host controller in the same way it is done in the previous chapter.
Networking over Thunderbolt cable¶
Thunderbolt technology allows software communication between two hosts connected by a Thunderbolt cable.
It is possible to tunnel any kind of traffic over a Thunderbolt link but currently we only support Apple ThunderboltIP protocol.
If the other host is running Windows or macOS, the only thing you need to
do is to connect a Thunderbolt cable between the two hosts; the
thunderbolt-net
driver is loaded automatically. If the other host is
also Linux you should load thunderbolt-net
manually on one host (it
does not matter which one):
# modprobe thunderbolt-net
This triggers module load on the other host automatically. If the driver is built-in to the kernel image, there is no need to do anything.
The driver will create one virtual ethernet interface per Thunderbolt
port which are named like thunderbolt0
and so on. From this point
you can either use standard userspace tools like ifconfig
to
configure the interface or let your GUI handle it automatically.
Forcing power¶
Many OEMs include a method that can be used to force the power of a Thunderbolt controller to an “On” state even if nothing is connected. If supported by your machine this will be exposed by the WMI bus with a sysfs attribute called “force_power”.
- For example the intel-wmi-thunderbolt driver exposes this attribute in:
/sys/bus/wmi/devices/86CCFD48-205E-4A77-9C48-2021CBEDE341/force_power
To force the power to on, write 1 to this attribute file. To disable force power, write 0 to this attribute file.
Note: it’s currently not possible to query the force power state of a platform.